1Par 4 - The opening hole requires a tee shot down the middle.The green is well bunkered, so an accurate approach is a must.2Par 5 – This slight dogleg left, is reachable in 2 for the longer hittersFairway bunkers on the left and right side of the sloped fairway fairway require an accurate tee shot. This is a hole to take advantage of, and make a birdie early in your round.3Par 4 – One of the longer Par 4’s on the course.The landing area has a uphill pitch which makes the hole play even longer. A drive in the fairway is important here.With a large green, there are multiple challenging hole locations.4Par 4 – A slight dogleg right, with an uphill second shot makes this hole challenging.With 3 bunkers surrounding the green, choosing the right club for the approach shot is crucial.5Par 3 – This hole requires a precise iron shot overthe water to the two-tiered green. With a rear pin placement, plenty of spin is needed to hold the ball on the top tier6Par 4 – A severe dogleg-left. Players who choose to go for it have to carry water and a row of palm trees.A safer tee shot is to the landing area down the right side. The well-trapped green slopes severely from back to front, causing most players to attempt to keep the ball below the h7Par 4 – A sharp dogleg left asks for a tee shot to the left-center of the fairway.This is the only way to take the trap and mound on the right and trees on the left out of the approach shot.8Par 3 – Hole 8 is short on yardage and long on intimidation.The elevated green guarded by two traps taunts the players from the tee.9Par 5 – A sharp dogleg-left, the tee and second shots are tight, tree-lined target areas.The subtle undulations on the green often surprise many a golfer.10Par 4 – This wide fairway allows players to be aggressive off the teeFairway bunkers line both sides, but players favor the right.This leaves a clean approach to the deepest green on the course.11Par 5 – Long hitters can find the green in two,as long as the narrow fairway is found off the tee.Varying pin placements increase the difficulty on the green.12Par 4 – A birdie is possible on this downwindrolling fairway with a slight dogleg left. A well-placed drive is important to miss the midpoint bunker just before the trees.13Par 4 – One of the more difficult holes on the course,13 begins a four-hole stretch that separates the champion from the rest of the field. The large, tiered green is notorious for not holding approach shots.14Par 3 – Even though this is the shortest hole on the course, it requires accuracy and good timing due to shifting winds, bunkers and water.The tee is elevated and the fairway slopes downward, making club selection crucial.15Par 4 – No. 15 has the reputation for being the toughest driving hole on the course.Bunkers on the left at mid-point and trees on both sides of the fairway leave little room for stray tee shots.The green is elevated and well-guarded by deep bunkers.16Par 4 – Consistently ranked as the most difficult hole on the course, staying out of the trees on the right is crucial.The green is hard to read with its many subtle contours. Most players are glad to take par on this hole.17Par 3 – No. 17’s tee shot is deceptively more difficult than it looks.The green is uphill from the tee and is protected on the front and in the rear by deep bunkers.18Par 5 – The most famous hole on the LPGA tour features the legendary Poppie’s Pond where the winner of the ANA Inspirations jumps in each year.The island green is huge with hard-to-read contours requiring accuracy and skill with the putter.
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